- Anne Line
Infobox Saint
name=Saint Anne Line
birth_date=unknown
death_date=death date|1601|2|27|df=y
feast_day=30 August
venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church
imagesize=
caption=
birth_place=Essex
death_place=Tyburn
titles=Forty Martyrs of England and Wales
beatified_date=15 December 1929
beatified_place=
beatified_by=Pope Pius XI
canonised_date=25 October 1970
canonised_place=
canonised_by=Pope Paul VI
attributes=
patronage=
major_shrine=
suppressed_date=
issues=
prayer="I am sentenced to die for harbouring a Catholic priest, and so far I am from repenting for having so done, that I wish, with all my soul, that where I have entertained one, I could have entertained a thousand."
prayer_attrib=Saint Anne Line (died
27 February 1601 ) was an Englishmartyr who was executed during the reign of Elizabeth I for harbouring a priest. Her date of birth is unknown, but she was the second daughter of Heigham, Esq., of Essex, a strict Calvinist, and was, together with her brother William, disinherited for converting to Catholicism. Some time before 1586, she married Roger Line, a young Catholic who had been disinherited for the same reason. Roger Line and young William Heigham were arrested together while attending Mass, and were imprisoned, fined, and finally banished. Roger Line went toFlanders , where he received a small allowance from the King of Spain, part of which he sent regularly to his wife until his death around 1594.Around that time, Fr. John Gerard opened a house of refuge for hiding priests, and put the newly-widowed Anne Line in charge of it, despite her ill health and frequent headaches. By 1597, this house had become insecure, so another was opened, and Anne Line was, again, placed in charge. On
2 February 1601 , Fr. Francis Page was saying Mass in the house managed by Anne Line, when men arrived to arrest him. The priest managed to slip into a special hiding place, prepared by Anne, and afterwards to escape, but she was arrested, along with two other laypeople.She was tried at the
Old Bailey on26 February , and was so weak that she was carried to the trial in a chair. She told the court that so far from regretting having concealed a priest, she only grieved that she "could not receive a thousand more." Sir John Popham, the judge, sentenced her to hang the next day atTyburn .Anne Line was hanged on
27 February 1601 . She was executed immediately before two priests, Fr. Roger Filcock, and Fr. Mark Barkworth, though, as a woman, she was spared the disembowelling that they endured. At the scaffold she repeated what she had said at her trial, declaring loudly to the bystanders: "I am sentenced to die for harbouring a Catholic priest, and so far I am from repenting for having so done, that I wish, with all my soul, that where I have entertained one, I could have entertained a thousand." Fr. Barkworth kissed her hand, while her body was still hanging, saying, "Oh blessed Mrs. Line, who has now happily received thy reward, thou art gone before us, but we shall quickly follow thee to bliss, if it please the Almighty."It has recently been argued that Shakespeare's poem
The Phoenix and the Turtle was written shortly after her death to commemorate Anne and Roger Line and that it allegorically takes the form of a Catholic requiem for the couple.Anne Line was beatified by
Pope Pius XI on15 December 1929 . She was canonised byPope Paul VI on25 October 1970 , as one of theForty Martyrs of England and Wales . Her feast day, along with that of the other thirty-nine martyrs, is on25 October . However, in certain Roman Catholic dioceses of England & Wales, such as theDiocese of Leeds , she shares a feast day with fellow saints and martyrs,Margaret Clitherow andMargaret Ward on30 August Her name is sometimes spelled as Ann Line.
ource
*catholic
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09270b.htm St. Anne Line] at Catholic Encyclopedia
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